Mitt Romney: Paul Ryan Medicare Plan And Mine Are The Same, 'If Not
Identical'
Posted: 08/16/2012
11:54 am
WASHINGTON -- Presumptive GOP
nominee Mitt Romney said Wednesday his Medicare plan was "close to
identical" to that of his vice-presidential choice, Rep. Paul Ryan
(R-Wis.), marking a full public embrace of the proposal from which his campaign
initially sought to distance itself.
"Actually, Paul Ryan and my
plan for Medicare, I think, is the same, if not identical -- it's probably
close to identical," he told Green Bay station WBAY. Ryan, as a House
member, in 2011 proposed shifting Medicare entirely to a voucher-like system,
then tweaked the proposal in 2012 to offer traditional Medicare alongside
private plans.
"Our plan is, for people 55
years of age and older, there's no change. The only change I'd mention for 55
or older is we'd restore the $817 billion President Obama took out of the
Medicare trust fund," said Romney.
Romney initially misstated the
Congressional Budget Office's estimate of the cost increase -- $716 billion --
that a repeal of the Obama health care law would entail for Medicare over 10
years. That reduction doesn't come from
patient care, but changes in hospital payments and Medicare
Advantage payments to private insurers.
Romney did not answer why he did
not object to the $716 billion cut when it was included among the savings in
Ryan's proposal.
"I think the $716 billion
that our seniors have paid for should stay with our seniors' program. It should
be restored to the Medicare trust fund ... to make its solvency last
longer," he said.
That's precisely the opposite of
what would happen, according to an analysis by the Associated Press. Repealing
Obama's health care law would cause the Medicare trust fund
to become insolvent eight years earlier, in 2016, rather than
in 2024 if it were to stay in place.
Throughout the interview, Romney
sought to emphasize who exactly his plan would affect, repeating that his plan
would not touch Medicare for those 55 and older.
When Romney announced Ryan as
vice-presidential nominee Saturday, the campaign initially sought to distance
itself from Ryan's budget plans. "Gov. Romney applauds Paul Ryan for going
in the right direction with his budget, and as president he will be putting
together his own plan for cutting the deficit and putting the budget on a path
to balance," read the campaign's talking
points.
Since then, Romney on Monday described
his plan as "very similar" to Ryan's. Top surrogate and former New
Hampshire Gov. John Sununu disputed that on Tuesday, calling them "very
different."
"For example, when Obama
gutted Medicare by taking $717 billion out of it, the Romney plan does not do
that. The Ryan plan mimicked part of the Obama package there. The Romney plan
does not. That's a big difference," he said to CNN.
But in Wednesday's interview, Romney
made it clear that there was no daylight between the two plans, and that the
difference was with Obama. "The place there's a big difference is between
myself and Paul Ryan and the president," he said to WBAY.
"The president has a very different plan. By the way, of course,
individuals are going to have some differences even among those in the same
party, but nothing compares with the difference we have with President
Obama."
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